| Museum's 
        Hack Art Piece Pulled By Michelle Delio
 8:55 a.m. May 15, 2002 PDT
 NEW YORK -- An art-hacking project at the New Museum of Contemporary Art 
        was pulled offline last Friday in response to security concerns raised 
        by the art.
 Curators had described the museum's Open Source Art Hack show as a display 
        of "hacking as an extreme art practice," but evidently one piece 
        in the exhibit was a tad too extreme for the museum's Internet service 
        provider.
 The problematic piece, "Minds of Concern: Breaking News," contains 
        a port scanner that probes selected activist groups' networks for security 
        holes.
 Visitors to the museum could activate the scanner, which then looked for 
        possible ways to penetrate a scanned site's network. The results were 
        displayed by news tickers on a computer screen, as well as through strobe 
        lights and sounds that corresponded to the findings of the scan.
 In response to a complaint from one of the sites scanned by "Minds," 
        the museum's ISP, Logicworks, notified the museum that the scanner could 
        not continue to run over the museum's Internet connection, according to 
        Lauren Tehan, head of public relations for the New Museum.
 Port scanners are legitimately used by network administrators and security 
        experts to examine networks. But scanners can also be used by malicious 
        hackers to probe systems for weaknesses. Therefore, many ISPs, including 
        Logicworks, ban the use of scanners over their services.
 Knowbotic Research, a group of Swiss digital artists who created the "Minds" 
        piece, said in a statement that pulling the plug on the scanner highlighted 
        a point that they had hoped to make with their art.
 "Security becomes the leading principle of today's politics; if you 
        dare to go in this political mousetrap and discuss, crisscross, enact 
        publicly in networks the concept of security, the law forces you immediately 
        to obscure the topic," a statement posted on the group's website 
        read, in part.
 The group's statement also suggested it did not receive support from the 
        museum or the show's curators in finding ways to keep the project online.
 "We had hoped to raise these issues unobscured in an art museum, 
        but since art institutions are unwilling to enter this zone, even or maybe 
        especially not in an Art Hacking show, due to the ubiquitous paranoia 
        and threat of getting sued, the museum and the curators made it very clear 
        to us that we as artists are 100 percent alone in any legal dispute."
 Tehan said that the museum has tried to find a way to keep the project 
        online.
 The museum has put up a website dedicated to following the debate about 
        the fate of "Minds."
 The Art Hack show runs through June 30.
 
 |   Location 
  On 
        the US legal bug 
  7.5.: 
        <nettime> 
        PDS 
  7.5.: 
        Re: <nettime> [L. Brown] 
  7.5.: 
        Re: 
        <nettime> 
        [F. Cramer] 
  8.5.:Re: 
        <nettime> KR 
  8.5.: 
        scan 
        reports 
  9.5.: 
        Server 
        Migration US 
  Port 
        scanning is legal in the US 
  10.5.: 
        provider vs kr CRACKED 
        ..Minds of concern::breakingnews...!!
 May 12,2002
 
  13.5.:New 
        York Times Article 
  RE2: 
        NYTIMES article 
  RE2: 
        NYTIMES article 
  RE:3 
        NYTIMES article: KR 
  15.5.: 
        wired article 
  [ 
        thing] review 
  19.5.: 
        Sonntagszeitung 
  13.6.: neural.it 
  14.6.:NZZ 
   
  
  (original 
        article)
 
   Invitation to the open source exhibition
  curated by Steve Dietz and Jenny Markatou (?)
 
 
   |